the real question is, will anyone hear it?
All the water falls back down to the ground.
Water that falls onto the land usually does one of three things. It may be absorbed into the ground and flow to streams or aquifers. The water may be consumed by plants or animals, or it may immediately evaporate.
When hail falls to the ground, it is because of the force of FRICTION!! :)
Yes. Every lightening that strikes breaks apart, or fixes, pure nitrogen, changing it into a form that plants can use. This type of form falls to the ground when it rains.
snowing
k
Increases
All the water falls back down to the ground.
The water cycle creates weather. Water evaporates from the surface of the ground and plants. It condenses in the upper atmosphere and then falls back to the ground as rain.
if it is a lot of rain, it will flood. if not, nothing will happen except for hydrating plants
It can puddle, get absorbed into the earth as groundwater, get used by plants, or runoff.
Blizzards only happen in cold front. Wind picks snow off the ground or when it falls down.
what will happen if falls from a dam
Rain does not usually fall on the ground in a rainforest because the ground is covered with plants and fungus unless the ground is bare because of slash-and-burn cultivation. In that case, the rain falls on the ground and washes minerals downstream.
When hail falls to the ground, it is because of the force of FRICTION!! :)
Water that falls onto the land usually does one of three things. It may be absorbed into the ground and flow to streams or aquifers. The water may be consumed by plants or animals, or it may immediately evaporate.
when water falls on a cemented ground the cemented ground can't absorve water much and the water flows away.